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SESSION 810
Friday, May 12, 10:15am - 11:15am Track: Service Desk Masters
Enterprise Service Management: It’s Time to Share ITSM Best Practice Outside of IT
Stephen Mann Principal Analyst and Content Director, ITSM.Tools [email protected]
Session Description IT didn't invent service management. Nor is it the only corporate service provider that can benefit from service management or ITSM. Other corporate service providers such as HR, facilities, and legal have similar operational and service management requirements to IT and, as such, they can also benefit from proven ITSM best practices and capabilities such as ticketing, workflow and automation, knowledge management, and self-service. All of which can help to improve services, increase efficiency, and deliver a better customer experience. Enterprise service management is one of the hottest ITSM and business improvement trends right now so what are you waiting for? Attend this session to: Understand the common issues and opportunities across corporate service providers such as IT, HR, and facilities, and how enterprise service management can help. Come away with an appreciation of what enterprise service management entails and how ITSM processes and technology can support other business functions. Receive practical tips on how to best start out, plan, deploy, and succeed with enterprise service management.
Speaker Background Principal and Content Director at the ITSM-focused industry analyst firm ITSM.tools. Also an independent IT and IT service management marketing content creator, and a frequent blogger, writer, and presenter on the challenges and opportunities for IT service management professionals. Previously held positions in IT research and analysis (at IT industry analyst firms Ovum and Forrester and the UK Post Office), IT service management consultancy, enterprise IT service desk and IT service management, IT asset management, innovation and creativity facilitation, project management, finance consultancy, internal audit, and product marketing for a SaaS IT service management technology vendor.
Enterprise Service Management
IT’S TIME TO SHARE ITSM BEST
PRACTICES
OUTSIDE OF IT
Stephen Mann@stephenmann @ITSM_tools
1 What Enterprise Service Management is
2 The Drivers and Benefits
3 Where Enterprise Service Management is and is going?
4 Practical Tips on how to succeed
5 Did someone say ”Digital”?
6 Key Takeaways and Q&A
Coverage
1 Know what Enterprise Service Management is?
2 Do Enterprise Service Management?
3 Do it well?
4 Plan to start/do more?
5 Think it’s a complete waste of time?
Audience questionsHOW MANY OF YOU (YOUR COMPANIES):
1 Help
2 Information
3 Services
4 Changes to existing services
They also provide services to internal or external customers
Each business function mirrors the IT organization
in terms of dealing with “customer” requests for:
1A late-2014 HDI survey reported that 51% of respondents are either
already doing or are planning to…
2A late-2015 SDI survey reported that 55% of respondents are
planning for enterprise service management.
3A TeamUltra 2016 survey backs the growth – only 14.9% of
respondents not using ITSM practices in other LOBs.
4SDI 2017 Q2 report and possible HDI report.
Forrester has a new Principle Analyst to cover the space.
ESM is a “hot topic” at events +
1 Consumerization
2 Business function demand
3 Better ITSM solutions
4 Increased vendor marketing
5 Digital transformation…
The drivers for ESM
1 Better service and customer experience
2 Improved efficiency and reduced operational costs
3 Self-service efficiencies and workload reductions
4 A better ROI on the corporate ITSM solution
5 Improved effectiveness
6 Improved visibility into operations and performance
The benefits of ESM
7 Increased control and governance
8 The opportunity for improvement
9Improved access and communication channels, plus
more effective communication
10 Improved accountability
11Better understanding of what services are needed and
provided
12 Standardization
The benefits of ESM
Source: SDI, “Life on the Service Desk in 2016”
…..
During 2016, which of the following do you expect to see?
Incident managementService request fulfilment
Change management Problem management
Self-serviceKnowledge management
Service catalog managementService level management
Asset management Chat Service
desk?
How individual ITSM capabilities can help other business functions
Image source: AXELOS
1. Service strategy. Which defines the perspective, position, plans, and patterns that the corporate service provider needs to execute
2. Service design. It’s not only the design of the services but also the governing practices, processes, and policies
3. Service transition. To quote ITIL: “Service transition ensures that new, modified, or retired services meet the expectations of the business”
4. Service operation. It’s the activities and processes required to deliver and manage services at agreed levels
5. Continual service improvement. It’s identifying and implementing improvements to services or business function operations
IT can be more than process adoption
Common LOB use casesHR
• Employee queries and complaints
• Payroll and benefit admin
• Learning and development admin
• Recruitment
• Demand planning
• KM across all HR domains
Facilities
• Health and safety
• Security
• Maintenance, testing, and inspections
• Cleaning and other office services
• Building management
• Workspace management (including moves)
Plus the benefits of employee self-service and self-help
Educational institutions
The admissions office
The alumni office
Faculty services
Libraries
Medical centres
Research departments
Students => there will most likely be an even greater expectation for consumer-world, tech-supported, support and customer service
Don’t treat ESM as an IT project
1. Requires organizational change as much as technology change
2. Not just about implementing ITSM processes and technology outside of IT
3. It’s ultimately about improving other business function service delivery and the service experience
Allow for the differences
1. Recognize that some business functions will be more “excited”
2. Recognize and accommodate inter-team differences
3. Definitely don’t try to force-fit other business functions to your ITSM tool
Don’t try to help other corporate service providers before helping yourself
1. Ensure that IT’s ITSM capabilities are working well/optimized
2. Don’t assume that IT has all the answers and all the best processes
3. Remember that the goal here is business improvement, not to impose IT’s way on the rest of the organization.
Don’t assume that ESM will sell itself –justify it in business terms
1. The benefits need to be clearly articulated in business terms
2. Don’t just sell the theory of enterprise service management
3. Refrain from using IT, ITSM, or ITIL language*
Think long and hard about how to deliver the ESM project
1. A big bang approach will be difficult and risky
2. Build on your successes, communicating achievements maintain interest, excitement, and momentum
3. Quick wins are just as applicable to ESM as they are to ITSM – so plan what you deliver when carefully
Did someone say “digital”?
1Understand that enterprise service management is about more than
sharing an ITSM tool and service desk best practices
2Ensure that the available benefits are sold and aimed for – don’t “do”
enterprise service management as “a good thing to do”
3 Get your IT house in order first
4Create business function solutions not IT’s solution for business
functions – remember to appreciate the differences
5 Use the terminology that’s right for each line of business
Key takeaways
Thank you for attending this session.
Please complete the short evaluation for this session on your mobile device. It is available in
your email or through the conference app.